- 1934–35 St. Louis Eagles season
NHLTeamSeason
Season=1934–35
Team=St. Louis
Conference=
ConferenceRank=
Division=Canadian
DivisionRank=
Record=11–31–6
HomeRecord=7–14–3
RoadRecord=4–17–3
GoalsFor=86
GoalsAgainst=144
GeneralManager=
Coach=Eddie Gerard &Buck Boucher
Captain=Syd Howe
AltCaptain=
Arena=St. Louis Arena
Attendance=
GoalsLeader=Syd Howe (14)
AssistsLeader=Carl Voss &Glen Brydson (18)
PointsLeader=Carl Voss (31)
PlusMinusLeader=
PIMLeader=Irv Frew (89)
WinsLeader=Bill Beveridge (11)
GAALeader=Bill Beveridge (2.89)The 1934–35
St. Louis Eagles season was the Eagles' only season in the NHL. The Ottawa Senators franchise relocated to St. Louis in the summer of 1934 due to financial losses in Ottawa. Despite good attendance at theSt. Louis Arena , the Eagles would have financial problems, due to travel costs. The Eagles would take the Senators' spot in the Canadian Division, and would face numerous road trips toMontreal andToronto throughout the season, despite being closer toChicago andDetroit , who played in the American Division.The Eagles were led offensively by
Carl Voss and his team leading 31 points, team captainSyd Howe would lead the club with 14 goals, despite being traded to theDetroit Red Wings late in the season, whileGlen Brydson would finish 2nd in team scoring with 29 points.Joe Jerwa , acquired by theBoston Bruins , would lead the defense with 11 points in only 16 games in St. Louis.Bill Beveridge would be the Eagles goaltender, winning 11 games with a 2.89 GAA and 3 shutouts.The strain of so many long train rides showed early on. Midway through the season, new head coach and former Senators player
Eddie Gerard was relieved of his duties after a 2–11–0 start and was replaced byBuck Boucher , who was the head coach of the Senators the previous season. Boucher would post a 9–20–6 record in 35 games. All told, the Eagles finished 11–31–6, dead last in the league with a winning percentage of .292.After the season, the franchise owners asked permission to suspend operations for a year. Instead, the NHL bought the players' contracts for $40,000 and dispersed the players to the other NHL teams. The NHL took back the franchise, on the condition that if it were resold, the original franchisees would share in the proceeds. [cite book|title=Trail of the Stanley Cup, vol. 2 1927–1946 inc|last=Colemen|first=Charles]
The
Montreal Maroons nearly relocated to St. Louis in 1938, but the NHL nixed the move. St. Louis would be without an NHL team until 1967, when the league expanded from 6 teams to 12, and the St. Louis Blues took the ice.eason standings
Goaltending
References
* [http://www.shrpsports.com SHRP Sports]
* [http://www.hockeydb.com The Internet Hockey Database]
*
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